Abstract
AbstractLeaf expansion under drought drives the trade-off between water saving for later grain production and canopy photosynthesis. Fine-tuning leaf expansion could therefore become a target of genetic progress for drought-prone environments. However, its components (branching, leaf production and elongation) may have their own genetic variability and plasticity under drought, making hard to calibrate crop simulation models and specify breeding targets. In this study, we focused on the genetic diversity of bread wheat and durum wheat to determine the links and trade-offs between the underlying processes of leaf growth under drought and how it translates to leaf expansion at the whole plant and canopy level. For that, we used non-destructive imaging both in the field and controlled condition platforms to determine the dynamics of the components of shoot expansion and analyze their relative contribution to the genetic variability of whole-plant shoot expansion under drought. Results show that leaf expansion measured at plant level in controlled environment was associated with that measured at canopy level in the field, indicating that controlled phenotyping platforms can capture the genetic variability of growth in the field. Both whole-plant and canopy expansion were associated with tillering rate. In addition, the sensitivity of shoot growth and tillering to soil water deficit were correlated, indicating that both tillering ability and sensitivity to water deficit drive the genetic variability of shoot expansion. Overall, dissecting leaf expansion dynamics allowed determining the links between shoot expansion traits under drought, and provides key targets in phenotyping, modelling and breeding for drought environments.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory